Python primary
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According to researcher Chuck Hansen, the W-34 Python was a gas-boosted fission primary used in several designs of American thermonuclear weapons.
Primary is the technical term for the fission bomb trigger of a thermonuclear or fusion bomb, which is used to compress, heat and ignite the fusion fuel in the thermonuclear secondary.
Hansen's research indicates that the W-34 Python primary was used in the US B28 nuclear bomb, W-28 nuclear warhead, W-40 nuclear warhead, and W-49 nuclear warhead, and as a boosted fission warhead without a thermonuclear second stage in several other weapons. These were the Mk-45 ASTOR wire-guided 21 inch, submarine launched heavyweight torpedo; the Mk-101 Lulu NDB; the Mk-105 Hotpoint laydown bomb.
Additionally, an anglicised W-34 Python known to the British as 'Peter' was manufactured in Britain as the primary for Red Snow, itself an anglicised W-28 warhead. Peter was also proposed as a replacement for the Red Beard warhead housed in a Red Beard carcass, and as an ADM for the British Army in Germany. The W-34 used the melt-cast HE Cyclotol, a variant of HMX as the material for its implosion lenses, and this relatively unsophisticated explosive that pre-dated PBX explosives was perhaps a reason why the British adopted this warhead, since they were attempting to deploy a thermonuclear warhead for their strategic bombers quickly, and the British were well-versed in the manufacture, storage and use of these melt-cast explosives.
Declassified British military documents also refer to a 'Low-Yield-Python' and the AIR-2 Genie air-to-air rocket being considered by the UK for their interceptors, suggesting that there was a design linkage with the W-25 low-yield warhead of the Genie. There is no hard evidence as yet, but the 11 kT yield of the W-34 Python would degrade to a figure comparable with the W-25 without the gas-boosting.
Historical evidence indicates that these weapons shared a reliability problem, which Hansen attributes to miscalculation of the reaction cross section of Tritium in fusion reactions. The weapons were not tested as extensively as some prior models due to a mid-1960s nuclear test moratorium, and the reliability problem was discovered and fixed after the moratorium ended. The flaw was apparently common with the W-44 Tsetse primary design.
Characteristics of these weapons are:
Python primary based nuclear weapons | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Model | Max Yield (kt) | Diameter (in) | Length (in) | Weight (lb) |
B28 | 1,450 | 22 | 170 | 2,300 |
W-28 | 1,450 | 20 | 60 | 1,725 |
W-40 | 10 | 18 | 32 | 385 |
W-49 | 1,440 | 20 | 58 | 1,610 |
W-34 | 11 | 17 | 32 | 320 |
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Beware the old story by Chuck Hansen, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, March/April 2001 pp. 52-55 (vol. 57, no. 02)
- Various Ministry of Defence and Ministry of Aviation declassified files lodged in the National Archives, London.
- http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Usa/Weapons/Allbombs.html
- http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Library/Brown/B28bomb.gif Richard Brown's sectioned b/w line drawing.
- http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Library/Brown/B28cut.jpg Richard Brown's sectioned colour drawing.
- http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Library/Brown/B28outsd.jpg Richard Brown's colour exterior drawing.